Session IV: Agricultural commodities price volatility and food security Long-Term Lessons from Short-term Volatility Amar Bhattacharya G24 Secretariat.

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Presentation transcript:

Session IV: Agricultural commodities price volatility and food security Long-Term Lessons from Short-term Volatility Amar Bhattacharya G24 Secretariat G-20 Conference on Commodity Price Volatility, Istanbul, September 2011

Outline 1.Differential Impacts of agricultural price developments 2.Addressing and coping with short-term volatility 3.Long-term imperative to revitalize agriculture

1. Differential Impacts of Agricultural Price Developments

Long Term Nominal and Real Agricultural Prices Source: World Bank, PINK data.

Variation in Nominal Commodity Prices Across Product Groups Source: World Bank, PINK data. Nominal commodity prices Base 100=2000 EnergyAgriculturalsBeveragesFood Raw Materials Metals & Minerals Average values Historical peak Historical minimum

Why Differential Impact? Differences in endowments and production patterns Differences in consumption patterns Impact of domestic policies

Net-Exporters and Net-Importers Across Selected Product Categories 7 Product CategoryIncome groupingNumber of Net-ExportersNumber of Net-Importers Agricultural High-income countries Middle-income countries Low-income countries All food items High-income countries Middle-income countries Low-income countries Basic food (excl. beverages) High-income countries Middle-income countries Low-income countries Agricultural raw materials High-income countries Middle-income countries Low-income countries Beverage Crops High-income countries Middle-income countries Low-income countries Note: The sample consists of 48 high-income countries, 97 middle-income countries and 40 low-income countries

Figure 1: Largest Net Exporters and Net Importers: “All Agriculture” (in US$ Billion) HICs

Figure 1: Largest Net Exporters and Net Importers: “All Agriculture” (in US$ Billion) MICs

Figure 1: Largest Net Exporters and Net Importers: “All Agriculture” (in US$ Billion) LICs

All Agricultural Exports: HICs US$ billion 11

All Agricultural Exports: MICs US$ billion 12

All Agricultural Exports: LICs US$ billion 13

2. Addressing and Coping with Short- Term Volatility

Agreement on Some Steps 1.Establish Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS) 2.Improve information and transparency in futures and OTC derivatives markets 3.Improve risk management tools 4.Emergency food reserves for humanitarian assistance with free access 5.Rebuild stocks but costly 6.Targeted social safety nets with focus on nutrition 7.Countercyclical financing from IMF and MDBs 8.Improved interntional coordination

Less on Others 1.Limits on positions or other direct regulations in futures markets 2.International buffer stocks 3.Change biofuels policy 4.Divert grain from biofuels or feed during spikes

2. Long-Term Imperative to Revitalize Agriculture

Hunger ~1B hungry, most in Africa and Asia Unlikely to meet MDG 1 1 ½ Billion % 20% 10% 8% World Hungry Source: FAO (2010) Asia & Pacific Africa Rest of the World Hunger 2010 Physical, economic & social access to food Non-food system causes “Hidden hunger” (~1B) “Over-nourished” (~1B)

Increasing demand Population most likely to peak ~9B B 8B 4B Population projection (Lutz & Samir 2010) 20% 60% 95% People will be richer and demand higher quality diet China India Africa Livestock consumption Developed nations Livestock consumption (FAO 2009)

Current Agricultural Production System Not Sustainable Degradation—24 percent of agricultural land degraded Depletion of forests and over-exploitation of fisheries 70 percent of global water use Nitrogen and other pollutants 30 percent of GHG emissions come directly or indirectly from agriculture Growing constraints on land, water, energy and marine resources

Impact of and Adapting to Climate Change Even with 2 degree mean rise in temperature impact on agricultural output could be percent in South Asia and Africa Significant probability of greater increase with unknown impacts Will require large physical and technological investments

A Big Push to Revitalize and Reform Agriculture Significant scope for increasing yields on basis of existing technologies Scope and need for adopting best practices including with respect to sustainable farming Invest in new technology including in adaptive technologies and in capacity building through coordinated global effort (CGIAR, FAO)

A Big Push to Revitalize and Reform Agriculture Large scale private and SOE investments can raise production and productivity of agriculture especially in low income countries But need for transparency and compliance with good practices. Principles for Responsible Agriculture Investments. Main challenge is to revamp public investment at the global, regional and national levels targeted to smallholder agriculture learning lessons from the past.

A Big Push to Revitalize and Reform Agriculture Globally coherent biofuels policies Reach agreement on a development oriented outcome of the Doha Round. Centerpiece must be the abandonment of trade distorting domestic support, reduction of export subsidies and improved market access by advanced economies. Case for transitory safeguards and support especially in low income countries although increases in prices will reduce the need for such protection Domestic regulatory reform Curb Waste

25 Incremental Financing Needs Are Large ($ billion) MDGs + Agriculture/ Food Security InfrastructureClimate Low Income Emerging Markets Source: G24 Secretariat estimates

Thank you